Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school itself is beautiful. Other than that, I don’t know much. It’s a small liberal arts school similar to many others.
Yes - liberal arts / literary / poetry / art heavy.
It went from all-girls to co-Ed decades ago, but still skews majority female. It’s an extremely safe-space for lesbian/ bisexual students, if that matters to your child.
My kid is a straight cis boy (he's welcoming to everyone and has friends of all stripes). But potentially then would Goucher not be a good place for him to meet dating prospects or find guy friends outside of the LGBTQ scene?
My cis het white boy had a wonderful experience at Goucher. He had friends who were outside the LGBTQ community, and friends in it -- his circle of friends included both, and he had people to date. Yes, there is a strong LGBTQ presence. There is also a large proportion of Jewish students. Also first-gen students, and BIPOC students. He saw that diversity as a plus. My DC blossomed during his time in college, developed and pursued new interests, became engaged in campus life, etc.
Virtues of Goucher: its a small LAC with a traditional greenspace campus, but instead of being in a rural location like a lot of LACs we visited, it's in the suburbs (of Baltimore) and has easy access to lots of retail, restaurants, etc. For us (in the DC area), it was nice that our DC stayed close to home, it was easy for him to visit for a weekend, or even meet up for dinner. It has other traditional virtues of a small LAC, like small class sizes, access to faculty and them getting to know their students well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school itself is beautiful. Other than that, I don’t know much. It’s a small liberal arts school similar to many others.
Yes - liberal arts / literary / poetry / art heavy.
It went from all-girls to co-Ed decades ago, but still skews majority female. It’s an extremely safe-space for lesbian/ bisexual students, if that matters to your child.
My kid is a straight cis boy (he's welcoming to everyone and has friends of all stripes). But potentially then would Goucher not be a good place for him to meet dating prospects or find guy friends outside of the LGBTQ scene?
My cis het white boy had a wonderful experience at Goucher. He had friends who were outside the LGBTQ community, and friends in it -- his circle of friends included both, and he had people to date. Yes, there is a strong LGBTQ presence. There is also a large proportion of Jewish students. Also first-gen students, and BIPOC students. He saw that diversity as a plus. My DC blossomed during his time in college, developed and pursued new interests, became engaged in campus life, etc.
Virtues of Goucher: its a small LAC with a traditional greenspace campus, but instead of being in a rural location like a lot of LACs we visited, it's in the suburbs (of Baltimore) and has easy access to lots of retail, restaurants, etc. For us (in the DC area), it was nice that our DC stayed close to home, it was easy for him to visit for a weekend, or even meet up for dinner. It has other traditional virtues of a small LAC, like small class sizes, access to faculty and them getting to know their students well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its endowment is higher than I thought at roughly $300 million. But its graduation rate stinks: less than 60%.
Wow, that's pretty bad. Why do you think that is?
My understanding is it's pretty heavy on the they/them. A lot of normal kids might flee for a more traditional college environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school itself is beautiful. Other than that, I don’t know much. It’s a small liberal arts school similar to many others.
Yes - liberal arts / literary / poetry / art heavy.
It went from all-girls to co-Ed decades ago, but still skews majority female. It’s an extremely safe-space for lesbian/ bisexual students, if that matters to your child.
My kid is a straight cis boy (he's welcoming to everyone and has friends of all stripes). But potentially then would Goucher not be a good place for him to meet dating prospects or find guy friends outside of the LGBTQ scene?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its endowment is higher than I thought at roughly $300 million. But its graduation rate stinks: less than 60%.
Wow, that's pretty bad. Why do you think that is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school itself is beautiful. Other than that, I don’t know much. It’s a small liberal arts school similar to many others.
Yes - liberal arts / literary / poetry / art heavy.
It went from all-girls to co-Ed decades ago, but still skews majority female. It’s an extremely safe-space for lesbian/ bisexual students, if that matters to your child.
Anonymous wrote:The school itself is beautiful. Other than that, I don’t know much. It’s a small liberal arts school similar to many others.
Anonymous wrote:Its endowment is higher than I thought at roughly $300 million. But its graduation rate stinks: less than 60%.